Interstate 10 in Texas
Route information | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Maintained by TxDOT | ||||
Length | 877.455 mi[1][a] (1,412.127 km) | |||
Existed | 1959–present | |||
NHS | Entire route | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end | I-10 / US 85 / US 180 at the New Mexico state line | |||
| ||||
East end | I-10 / US 90 at the Louisiana state line | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Texas | |||
Counties | El Paso, Hudspeth, Culberson, Jeff Davis, Reeves, Pecos, Crockett, Sutton, Kimble, Gillespie, Kerr, Kendall, Bexar, Guadalupe, Caldwell, Gonzales, Fayette, Colorado, Austin, Waller, Fort Bend, Harris, Chambers, Jefferson, Orange | |||
Highway system | ||||
|
Interstate 10 (I-10[b]) is the major east–west Interstate Highway in the Southern United States. In the U.S. state of Texas, it runs east from Anthony, at the border with New Mexico, through El Paso, San Antonio, and Houston to the border with Louisiana in Orange, Texas. At just under 880 mi (1,420 km), the Texas segment of I-10, maintained by the Texas Department of Transportation, is the longest continuous untolled freeway in North America that is operated by a single authority.[3] It is also the longest stretch of Interstate Highway with a single designation within a single state.[c] Mile marker 880 and its corresponding exit number in Orange, Texas, are the highest numbered mile marker and exit on any freeway in North America. After widening was completed in 2008, a portion of the highway west of Houston is now also believed to be the widest in the world, at 26 lanes when including feeders.[4]
More than a third of I-10's length is located in Texas. El Paso, near the New Mexico state line, is 785 mi (1,263 km) from the western terminus of I-10 in Santa Monica, California, making it closer to Los Angeles than it is to Orange, Texas, 857 mi (1,379 km) away at the Louisiana state line. Likewise, Orange is only 789 mi (1,270 km) from the eastern terminus of I-10 in Jacksonville, Florida.
Route description
West Texas
I-10 enters Texas northwest of El Paso near Anthony and runs southward, alongside US Route 85 (US 85) and US 180. US 85 splits off in West El Paso at exit 13 (Sunland Park Drive, Paisano Drive), where US 85 heads south on Paisano Drive, through downtown El Paso, and ends at the Stanton Street Bridge and the border with Mexico via local streets. As of the summer of 2016, the stretch of I-10 that runs through El Paso was in the midst of a major construction project, which sought to link North/South Desert Boulevard (the westside frontage roads) with Gateway East and Gateway West (the central and eastside frontage roads). Several miles of frontage road were being built where none previously existed. I-10/US 180 continues turning to the east towards downtown El Paso. I-10 then meets I-110 and US 54 (the "Patriot Freeway", or North–South Freeway) in a complex, three-level interchange referred to by locals as the "Spaghetti Bowl". I-10 and US 180 diverge east of downtown at exit 23B (Paisano Drive) as US 180 heads northeast (joining US 62 and Paisano Drive northbound) and I-10 to the southeast. I-10's frontage-road system is called Desert Boulevard where it runs through West El Paso, and Gateway Boulevard where it runs through Central and East El Paso. Among these stretches of the highway. Gateway East Boulevard is the longest, extending continuously for roughly 22 mi (35 km). Continuing towards Tornillo and Fabens, I-10 turns to the southeast and runs alongside the Rio Grande and the Mexican border for approximately 60 mi (97 km).
Where I-10 leaves the Rio Grande, it runs primarily eastward. Just before entering the city of Van Horn, at the border of Hudspeth and Culberson counties, I-10 leaves the Mountain Time Zone and enters the Central Time Zone. Just east of Kent, the western terminus of I-20 intersects with I-10. I-20 heads northeast towards the Dallas–Fort Worth area, and I-10 continues to run eastward. US 67 runs alongside I-10 for a stretch; the La Entrada al Pacifico trade corridor is a part of this stretch of I-10. Near Junction, I-10 begins a more southeastwardly course as it runs toward the San Antonio metropolitan area. Near Comfort, I-10 and US 87 begin to run alongside each other until they reach San Antonio.
Because I-10 crosses some of the most rural and sparsely inhabited parts of the United States, notably the Trans-Pecos Region, it has several unique features that differentiate it from other interstate highways. I-10 is one of the very few interstates that has at-grade intersections (roads that intersect it at a 90-degree angle, rather than crossing via an overpass or underpass with on and off ramps). These are private-access roads (mostly from large ranches), and are found over a limited stretch in western Texas.
The stretch from Kerr County to El Paso County has an 80 mph (129 km/h) speed limit, which was the highest in the nation,[5] until the opening of the 85 mph (137 km/h) southern section of Texas State Highway 130 (SH 130) on October 24, 2012.[6]
San Antonio and Central Texas
I-10 is the busiest freeway in San Antonio with nearly 200,000 vehicles on an average day.[7] On the northwest side, I-10 is known as the McDermott Freeway, named after Robert F. McDermott, former dean of the United States Air Force Academy as well as CEO of San Antonio-based USAA. The highway enters the city concurrently with US 87 from the north and travels more in a north–south direction into downtown, rather than the east–west designation found on the Interstate Highway signs. The section of I-10 from Ralph Fair Road (FM 3351) to La Cantera Parkway includes HOV lanes for both directions.[8] The northern section from Loop 1604 to downtown serves one of the fastest growing areas of the city. A majority of the region's suburban office space is located along the corridor as are the headquarters for USAA, gasoline refiner and retailer Valero, South Texas Medical Center, the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA), Six Flags Fiesta Texas, and the Shops at La Cantera. I-10 intersects I-410 for the first time near Balcones Heights, a suburban city within San Antonio. The construction of a four-level interchange to accommodate the growing northwest side has been completed. Heavy commercial development dominates the landscape between I-410 and Loop 1604. Inside I-410, the route is lined with light industrial and residential areas.
As I-10 heads south into downtown, it splits into an upper level with three lanes in each direction and a lower level with two lanes in each direction. It was necessary to design the freeway this way in order to accommodate the amount of traffic heading into downtown and to fit into the narrow corridor that was surrounded by existing infrastructure. I-10 meets I-35 on the northwest side of downtown and it overlaps I-35 south to form the west side of the downtown loop. The I-35 exit numbers are carried through during the concurrency. I-10 and I-35 end their concurrency at a four-level interchange on the southwest side of downtown with the junction of US 90 from the west. I-35 continues to the south and I-10 and US 90 run concurrently to the east to form the south side of the downtown loop. This section of I-10 is known as the Jose Lopez Freeway, named after the Medal of Honor recipient. A four-level interchange with I-37 occurs approximately 2 mi (3.2 km) east of the interchange with I-35. I-10 heads east away from downtown through mainly residential neighborhoods on the east side of San Antonio. I-10's concurrency with US 87 ends just east of downtown where US 87 heads south towards Victoria. I-10 provides access to the AT&T Center, home of the San Antonio Spurs, and to the Freeman Coliseum. Leaving San Antonio, I-10 again passes I-410 and Loop 1604. I-10 is known as the 90th Infantry Division Memorial Highway on this stretch east of San Antonio. I-10 and US 90 continue their concurrency until they diverge in Seguin. They continue from there on to Houston nearly paralleling each other with short stints of overlaps along the route.
Houston and East Texas
From the western suburb of Katy to downtown, I-10 is known as the Katy Freeway in Houston. This section was widened in 2008 to as many as 26 total lanes, counting the six lanes of the access (frontage/feeder) road, which feature traffic signals, and driveway access and are not limited-access and therefore not technically part of the freeway itself but are directly adjacent.[9] Between the West Beltway and the West Loop, the Katy Freeway features a basic configuration of 14 lanes, featuring seven lanes each direction. This cross-section swells with auxiliary lanes, ramp lanes, and the inclusion of the frontage access roads, although those lanes are controlled by traffic signals. Including auxiliary lanes, ramp lanes, and the access frontage roads, the minimum lane count is 22 total lanes. In this section, the width is 24 lanes at multiple locations and up to 26 lanes east of Gessner Road (12 main lanes, eight lanes of access roads, and six mid-freeway HOT/HOV lanes). From the Fort Bend county line to I-610, there is a minimum of four main lanes in each direction.[10] The maximum number of undivided lanes at any point on the freeway is nine in the eastbound direction approaching Antoine Drive (though this includes one exit-only lane); this is one of the widest sections of undivided highway in a single direction in the world.[11] The widest right-of-way, 556 ft (169 m), occurs at the Katy Freeway's intersection with Bunker Hill;[12] at that point, the expansion plans called for six main lanes plus two toll lanes in each direction along with 10 lanes on the feeder/frontage roads. While this section still features 14 through continuous lanes through the Bunker Hill interchange, when auxiliary lanes, ramp lanes, and the frontage access roads are included, the actual striping after construction delineates 29 lanes, including all 26 of the planned lanes plus an additional lane in each direction to enter or exit the toll lanes and one more turn lane on the eastbound feeder road.[13]
Between I-610 and I-45 west of downtown, the interstate contains at least five main lanes in each direction. Before 2008, this section had traditionally been the widest section of I-10 in the Houston area and the only one with a significant portion below grade. A project completed in 2014 added one extra auxiliary lane in each direction between Shepherd Drive and Taylor Street. In addition, the eastbound feeder road that ends at Studemont was extended to Taylor Street. As I-10 travels through downtown, it junctions with I-45 and I-69/US 59. Both interchanges feature left exits, allowing several lane shifts for through traffic. I-10 provides access to Minute Maid Park, home of the Houston Astros, and also runs through the campus of the University of Houston–Downtown.
The section east of downtown Houston is officially known as the "East Freeway", although it is widely known by locals as the Baytown East Freeway or colloquially shortened to the Beast, due to a marketing push by Baytown, one of the largest cities in the Greater Houston Area. I-10 reaches Beaumont at an interchange with US 69/US 96/US 287 and it runs concurrently with the US Highways for 2.63 mi (4.23 km) and curves to the east again at a second interchange. At College Street (US 90), I-10 expands to eight lanes. I-10 meets US 90 again near the recently reconstructed Purple Heart Memorial Bridge over the Neches River; these highways travel concurrently the remainder of the way across the state. I-10 reaches Orange County and passes through the towns of Rose City, Vidor, Pinehurst, and Orange. Business US 90-Y splits off and comes back to I-10 near the Sabine River Bridge over the Sabine River. At the river, I-10 finally leaves Texas and crosses into Louisiana.
History
El Paso and West Texas
I-10 replaced and runs concurrently with US 85 from the New Mexico state line up until the two diverge at mile marker 13. The two highways parallel each other for several miles until US 85 continues to head south to the border with Mexico and I-10 turns east towards Downtown El Paso. Prior to the Interstate Highway system, US 85 ran concurrent with US 80 from the New Mexico border until the two diverged in Downtown El Paso. When I-10 was constructed in downtown El Paso, several blocks were demolished, and a sub-grade trench was built for the freeway. A series of overpasses now carry the preexisting north–south surface streets over the east–west stretch of I-10 through downtown. I-10 replaced US 80 through El Paso and to the southeast and east to the present day junction of I-10 and I-20. US 80 along this route has been completely removed from the highway system in favor of I-10.[14]
At the junction with I-20, I-10 replaced US 290 eastward to the present day junction of I-10 and US 290 southeast of Junction. This section of US 290 was deleted from the highway system.[15] From this point to near Comfort, I-10 replaced SH 27. SH 27 still exists along this stretch, mostly paralleling I-10 to the south. From Comfort southeast to San Antonio, I-10 directly replaced US 87.
Central Texas
I-10 generally follows the alignment of US 87 on the northwest side of San Antonio into downtown. A new alignment was built to the south of downtown for the freeway since it was impossible to upgrade the surface streets in downtown that US 87 and US 90 followed prior to the Interstate Highway System. Southeast of downtown, I-10 curves back to the northeast to connect with the pre-interstate alignment of US 90.
Construction of portions of I-10 were well underway and completed prior to the commissioning of the highway in 1959. The section from Culebra Road to Woodlawn Avenue opened as the first freeway in San Antonio in 1949, but was signed as US 87. Expansion and construction continued in the 1950s, but the bulk of the construction occurred in the 1960s after the interstate was commissioned. The $11 million project to construct the interchange with I-37 was at the time the largest single contract in the history of the state highway commission.[16] The current alignment was completed by 1968.
Rapid growth in San Antonio led to the original highway quickly becoming inadequate, with the result that it has been in perpetual construction and expansion. In the 1980s, the portion just northwest of downtown was reconstructed to add a double deck feature to expand the freeway to five lanes in each direction. In 1990, the interstate had only two lanes in each direction from Loop 1604 to where the double-deck freeway begins near downtown. Recent construction has expanded the freeway to five lanes in each direction from just outside the I-410 loop all the way into downtown. The I-10/I-410 interchange was reconstructed into a four-level stack interchange.[17]
East Texas
When constructed during the 1960s, I-10 between Katy and Houston, known as the Katy Freeway,[18] was built with six to eight lanes wide barring side lanes, being modest by Houston standards because existing traffic demand to the farming area of West Houston was relatively low. As the population and economic activity increased in the area, vehicular traffic increased, reaching an annual average daily traffic (AADT) of 238,000 vehicles just west of the West Loop in 2001.[19]
In 2000, increased traffic levels and congestion led to plans being approved for widening of the freeway to 16 lanes with a capacity for 200,000 cars per day. An old railway running along the north side of the freeway was demolished in 2002 in preparation for construction which began in 2004. The interior two lanes in each direction between SH 6 and west I-610, the Katy Freeway Managed Lanes or Katy Tollway, were built as high-occupancy toll lanes and are managed by the Harris County Toll Road Authority. The section just west of SH 6 to the Fort Bend–Harris county line opened in late June 2006.[20] Two intersections were rebuilt (Beltway 8 and I-610), toll booths were added, together with landscaping as part of Houston's Highway Beautification Project. Most of the section between Beltway 8 and SH 6 had been laid by September 2006 and work was completed in October 2008.
Tolls on the managed lanes vary by vehicle occupancy, axle count and time of day. High occupancy vehicles may travel for free at certain times.[21]
Severe flooding of the Sabine River occurred in March 2016. Days of continuous heavy rains, coupled with the controversial opening of the Toledo Bend Dam and the release of 207,000 to 208,000 cu ft/s (5,900 to 5,900 m3/s) into the river, caused the closing of I-10.[22] The water level in Deweyville rose to 130-year record heights, prompting a joint decision by the Texas Department of Transportation (TxDOT) and the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development (LaDOTD) to close I-10 for four days near Orange.[23]
Much of I-10 between Houston and Beaumont was shut down in late August 2017 as Hurricane Harvey inundated the Houston and East Texas area with record rainfall. In 2020, I-10 between Beaumont and the Louisiana state line was shut down due to debris and heavy rain caused by Hurricanes Delta and Laura.
Exit list
County | Location | mi[24] | km | Exit | Destinations | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
El Paso | Anthony | 0.000 | 0.000 | I-10 west (US 85 north / US 180 west) – Las Cruces | Continuation into New Mexico | ||
0.007– 1.612 | 0.011– 2.594 | 0 | FM 1905 – Anthony | ||||
0.644– 2.020 | 1.036– 3.251 | Tourist Info Center; exit 1 (eastbound) | |||||
Canutillo | 2.657– 3.434 | 4.276– 5.526 | 2 | Spur 37 (Vinton Road) / Westway Drive | |||
El Paso | 4.881– 5.196 | 7.855– 8.362 | 5 | Check Station | Eastbound only | ||
5.858– 6.679 | 9.428– 10.749 | 6A | Loop 375 east (Transmountain Road) / Spur 16 south | Signed as exit 6 eastbound | |||
6.922 | 11.140 | 6B | Loop 375 east (Transmountain Road) | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; Loop 375 exit 11B westbound to I-10 westbound; counterclockwise terminus of Loop 375 | |||
7.573– 8.451 | 12.188– 13.601 | 8 | SH 178 (Paseo del Norte) / Artcraft Road | ||||
8.782– 10.241 | 14.133– 16.481 | 9 | Redd Road | ||||
10.821– 11.422 | 17.415– 18.382 | 11 | SH 20 (Mesa Street) / Thorn Avenue | Thorn Avenue not signed eastbound | |||
12.642– 12.749 | 20.345– 20.518 | 12 | Resler Drive | Closed; former westbound exit and eastbound entrance now part of US 85/SH 375 Toll | |||
12.025– 14.525 | 19.352– 23.376 | 13 | US 85 / SH 375 Toll (Paisano Drive) / Sunland Park Drive / Resler Drive | Eastern end of US 85 concurrency; clockwise terminus of SH 375 Toll (Loop 375); US 85 (Paisano Drive) not signed westbound; Resler Drive not signed eastbound | |||
15.826– 16.271 | 25.469– 26.186 | 16 | Executive Center Boulevard | ||||
17.689– 18.335 | 28.468– 29.507 | 18A | Schuster Avenue, University Avenue – U.T. El Paso | ||||
18.444– 18.815 | 29.683– 30.280 | 18B | Porfirio Díaz Street, Franklin Avenue | No westbound entrance | |||
19.029– 19.792 | 30.624– 31.852 | 19A | SH 20 (Mesa Street) – Downtown El Paso, Convention Center, Tourist Information, Arts District | Signed as exit 19 eastbound; eastbound traffic enter Downtown via Wyoming Avenue | |||
19.922 | 32.061 | 19B | Downtown El Paso, Convention Center, Tourist Information, Arts District | Westbound exit only; downtown access via Missouri Avenue | |||
20.108– 21.940 | 32.361– 35.309 | 20 | Dallas Street, Cotton Street | ||||
20.938– 21.923 | 33.696– 35.282 | 21 | Piedras Street | ||||
21.536– 22.463 | 34.659– 36.151 | 22A | Loop 478 (Copia Street) | ||||
21.847– 23.058 | 35.159– 37.108 | 22B | US 54 east (Patriot Freeway) / I-110 south – Alamogordo, Fort Bliss, Juárez | US 54 exit 21; I-110 exit 21A | |||
22.657– 23.365 | 36.463– 37.602 | 23A | Raynolds Street | ||||
23.254– 24.001 | 37.424– 38.626 | 23B | US 62 / US 180 east (Paisano Drive) / Chelsea Street | Eastern end of US 180 concurrency | |||
23.787– 24.980 | 38.281– 40.201 | 24 | Geronimo Drive, Trowbridge Drive | Signed as exits 24A (Trowbridge) and 24B (Geronimo) eastbound | |||
25.369– 26.520 | 40.827– 42.680 | 25 | Airway Boulevard – El Paso Airport | ||||
25.790– 27.326 | 41.505– 43.977 | 26 | Hawkins Boulevard | ||||
Gateway Boulevard West | Westbound entrance only | ||||||
26.793 | 43.119 | 27 | Hunter Drive, Viscount Boulevard | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; westbound access is via exit 28A | |||
27.811– 28.463 | 44.757– 45.807 | 28A | FM 2316 (McRae Boulevard) / Sumac Drive / Viscount Boulevard | Access to Del Sol Medical Center-East; Sumac Drive not signed westobund, Viscount Boulevard not signed eastbound | |||
28.717– 29.316 | 46.216– 47.180 | 28B | Yarbrough Drive, Sumac Drive | ||||
29.660 | 47.733 | 29 | Lomaland Drive | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; westbound access is via exit 30 | |||
30.047– 31.546 | 48.356– 50.768 | 30 | Lee Trevino Drive, Lomaland Drive | Lomaland Drive not signed eastbound | |||
31.487– 32.937 | 50.673– 53.007 | 32 | FM 659 (Zaragoza Road, George Dieter Road) | ||||
33.800 | 54.396 | 33 | Don Haskins Drive | Westbound exit only | |||
33.218– 34.395 | 53.459– 55.353 | 34 | Loop 375 / Americas Avenue, Joe Battle Boulevard | Signed as exits 34A (Loop 375) and 34B (Americas Avenue, Joe Battle Boulevard) | |||
Socorro | 34.970– 35.868 | 56.279– 57.724 | 35 | Eastlake Boulevard | |||
36.847– 38.464 | 59.299– 61.902 | 37 | FM 1281 (Horizon Boulevard) – Horizon City, Socorro | ||||
Clint | 42.438– 43.068 | 68.297– 69.311 | 42 | FM 1110 – Clint, San Elizario | |||
Fabens | 49.206– 49.595 | 79.189– 79.815 | 49 | FM 793 – Fabens | |||
| 50.302– 50.993 | 80.953– 82.065 | 51 | El Paso County Safety Rest Area | |||
Tornillo | 55.215– 55.671 | 88.860– 89.594 | 55 | Tornillo | |||
Hudspeth | Fort Hancock | 68.1 | 109.6 | 68 | Acala Road | ||
72.3 | 116.4 | 72 | Spur 148 – Fort Hancock | ||||
78.4 | 126.2 | 78 | SH 20 west – McNary | ||||
| 81.6 | 131.3 | 81 | FM 2217 | |||
| 85.1 | 137.0 | 85 | Esperanza Road | |||
| 87.6 | 141.0 | 87 | FM 34 | |||
| 95.4 | 153.5 | 95 | Frontage Road | Eastbound exit and entrance | ||
| 98.9 | 159.2 | 99 | Lasca Road | |||
Sierra Blanca | 105.6 | 169.9 | 105 | I-10 BL east (El Paso Street) | Signed as exit 106 westbound | ||
106.9 | 172.0 | 107 | RM 1111 (Sierra Blanca Avenue) | ||||
108.5 | 174.6 | 108 | I-10 BL west – Sierra Blanca | Westbound exit only | |||
Allamoore | 128.9 | 207.4 | 129 | Allamore | |||
| 132.7 | 213.6 | 133 | Frontage Road | Westbound exit and entrance | ||
Culberson | Van Horn | 137.8 | 221.8 | 138 | I-10 BL east / Golf Course Drive | ||
139.7 | 224.8 | 140A | US 90 / SH 54 (Van Horn Drive) – Valentine, Marfa, Alpine | Access to Culberson County Airport | |||
140.6 | 226.3 | 140B | I-10 BL west (Ross Drive) | ||||
Wild Horse | 146.3 | 235.4 | 146 | Wild Horse Road | |||
Michigan Flat | 152.9 | 246.1 | 153 | Michigan Flat | |||
Plateau | 159.4 | 256.5 | 159 | Plateau | |||
Boracho | 166.0 | 267.2 | 166 | Boracho Station | |||
| 172.6 | 277.8 | 173 | Hurds Draw Road | |||
Kent | 176.3 | 283.7 | 176 | SH 118 / RM 2424 – Kent, Fort Davis | |||
Jeff Davis | | 181.1 | 291.5 | 181 | Cherry Creek Road | ||
| 183.6 | 295.5 | 184 | Springhills | |||
Reeves | | 186.2 | 299.7 | 186 | I-10 east – San Antonio | Westbound left exit and eastbound left entrance; provides access to I-10 east for travelers coming from I-20 west | |
| 186.8 | 300.6 | 187 | I-20 east – Fort Worth, Dallas | No eastbound entrance; left exit eastbound; no exit number eastbound; Fort Worth not signed westbound; western terminus of I-20 | ||
| 187.6 | 301.9 | 188 | Giffin Road | |||
| 192.3 | 309.5 | 192 | FM 3078 east – Toyahvale, Fort Davis | |||
Balmorhea | 206.0 | 331.5 | 206 | I-10 BL east / FM 2903 – Toyah, Balmorhea | |||
209.0 | 336.4 | 209 | I-10 BL west / SH 17 south – Balmorhea, Fort Davis | Western end of SH 17 concurrency | |||
Saragosa | 211.5 | 340.4 | 212 | SH 17 / FM 2448 – Pecos | Eastern end of SH 17 concurrency | ||
| 213.8 | 344.1 | 214 | FM 2448 | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 221.7 | 356.8 | 222 | Hoefs Road | |||
Pecos | | 229.1 | 368.7 | 229 | Hovey Road | ||
| 235.2 | 378.5 | 235 | Mendel Road | |||
| 240.8 | 387.5 | 241 | Kennedy Road | |||
| 245.9 | 395.7 | 246 | Firestone Road | |||
| 248.1 | 399.3 | 248 | US 67 south / FM 1776 – Alpine, Marfa, Presidio, Sul Ross State University | Western end of US 67 concurrency | ||
| 252.3 | 406.0 | 253 | FM 2037 | |||
Fort Stockton | 256.2 | 412.3 | 256 | I-10 BL east – Fort Stockton | |||
257.0 | 413.6 | 257 | US 285 – Pecos, Sanderson | No westbound entrance, access to Fort Stockton-Pecos County Airport | |||
258.5 | 416.0 | 259B | SH 18 – Monahans | Signed as exit 259 eastbound, access to Pecos County Memorial Hospital | |||
259.3 | 417.3 | 259A | FM 1053 | Eastbound access is via exit 259 | |||
260.8 | 419.7 | 261 | I-10 BL west / US 385 south – Fort Stockton, Marathon | Western end of US 385 concurrency | |||
| 263.8 | 424.5 | 264 | Warnock Road | |||
| 271.5 | 436.9 | 272 | University Road | |||
| 272.6 | 438.7 | 273 | US 67 north / US 385 north – San Angelo, McCamey | Eastern end of US 67/US 385 concurrency; no eastbound entrance | ||
| 276.6 | 445.1 | 277 | RM 2023 | |||
| 284.4 | 457.7 | 285 | McKenzie Road | |||
| 287.5 | 462.7 | 288 | Ligon Road | |||
Bakersfield | 294.1 | 473.3 | 294 | FM 11 – Bakersfield | |||
| 298.4 | 480.2 | 298 | RM 2886 | |||
| 306.8 | 493.7 | 307 | US 190 to FM 305 – Iraan, McCamey | |||
| 314.3 | 505.8 | 314 | Frontage Road | |||
| 319.9 | 514.8 | 320 | ||||
| 324.8 | 522.7 | 325 | SH 290 / SH 349 – Iraan, Sheffield | |||
Crockett | | 327.8 | 527.5 | 328 | County Road 307 | ||
| 336.7 | 541.9 | 337 | County Road 305 | |||
| 343.1 | 552.2 | 343 | SH 290 west – Sheffield | |||
| 349.5 | 562.5 | 350 | RM 2398 (County Road 405) | |||
| 360.8 | 580.7 | 361 | RM 2083 | |||
Ozona | 363.4 | 584.8 | 363 | Loop 466 / RM 2398 – Ozona | |||
365.2 | 587.7 | 365 | SH 163 – Sterling City, Comstock | Access to Ozona Municipal Airport | |||
367.5 | 591.4 | 368 | Loop 466 – Ozona | ||||
| 371.8 | 598.4 | 372 | Taylor Box Road | |||
Sutton | | 380.9 | 613.0 | 381 | RM 1312 | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |
| 387.3 | 623.3 | 388 | RM 1312 | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| 391.8 | 630.5 | 392 | RM 1989 (Caverns of Sonora Road) to RM 1312 | |||
Sonora | 399.3 | 642.6 | 399 | Loop 467 – Sonora | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
400.0 | 643.7 | 400 | US 277 – San Angelo, Del Rio | Access to Sonora Municipal Airport | |||
403.8 | 649.9 | 404 | Loop 467 / RM 864 / RM 3130 – Sonora, Fort McKavett | ||||
| 411.8 | 662.7 | 412 | To RM 3130 / Allison Road | |||
| 420.0 | 675.9 | 420 | RM 3130 (Baker Road) | |||
| 428.4 | 689.4 | 429 | To RM 3130 / Harrell Road | |||
Kimble | Roosevelt | 436.9 | 703.1 | 437 | Loop 291 – Roosevelt | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |
438.2 | 705.2 | 438 | Loop 291 – Roosevelt | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
| 440.7 | 709.2 | 442 | Loop 291 / RM 1674 – Fort McKavett | |||
| 444.8 | 715.8 | 445 | RM 1674 | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 451.1 | 726.0 | 451 | RM 2291 (Cleo Road) | |||
Junction | 455.4 | 732.9 | 456 | US 83 north / US 377 to Loop 481 – Junction, Menard | Western end of US 83 concurrency, access to Kimble Hospital | ||
457.3 | 736.0 | 457 | FM 2169 (Martinez Street) – Junction | ||||
459.8 | 740.0 | 460 | Loop 481 – Junction, Texas Tech University Center at Junction | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
| 461.5 | 742.7 | 462 | US 83 south – Leakey | Eastern end of US 83 concurrency | ||
Segovia | 464.5 | 747.5 | 465 | FM 2169 – Segovia | |||
| 471.3 | 758.5 | 472 | RM 479 / FM 2169 / Old Segovia Road | |||
| 475.6 | 765.4 | 476 | Stapp Ranch Road | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 476.6 | 767.0 | 477 | US 290 east – Fredericksburg | |||
Kerr | | 483.9 | 778.8 | 484 | Midway Road | ||
Mountain Home | 487.5 | 784.6 | 488 | SH 27 – Mountain Home, Ingram | |||
489.8 | 788.3 | 490 | SH 41 – Mountain Home, Rocksprings | ||||
| 491.8 | 791.5 | 492 | RM 479 | |||
Gillespie | No major intersections | ||||||
Kerr | | 501.1 | 806.4 | 501 | FM 1338 | ||
Kerrville | 504.8 | 812.4 | 505 | RM 783 – Harper, Kerrville | |||
507.7 | 817.1 | 508 | SH 16 – Kerrville | Access to Peterson Regional Medical Center, Kerrville VA Medical Center | |||
| 519.5 | 836.1 | 520 | FM 1341 | |||
Kendall | Comfort | 522 | North Creek Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
522.4 | 840.7 | 523 | US 87 north / Bus. US 87 south – San Angelo, Comfort, Fredericksburg | Western end of US 87 concurrency | |||
524.0 | 843.3 | 524 | Bus. US 87 north / FM 1621 – Comfort, Waring | ||||
| 526.6 | 847.5 | 527 | FM 1621 / FM 289 – Waring | Eastbound access is via exit 524 | ||
| 532.7 | 857.3 | 533 | FM 289 – Welfare | |||
Boerne | 536.9 | 864.1 | 537 | Bus. US 87 south – Boerne | Business Route | ||
537.6 | 865.2 | 538 | Ranger Creek Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
538.7 | 867.0 | 539 | Johns Road | ||||
540.1 | 869.2 | 540 | SH 46 – New Braunfels, Bandera | Access to Boerne-Methodist Hospital | |||
541.8 | 871.9 | 542 | Bus. US 87 north – Boerne | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
542.8 | 873.6 | 543 | Boerne Stage Road, Cascade Caverns Road | ||||
Bexar | Fair Oaks Ranch | 544.6 | 876.4 | 545 | Balcones Creek Road, Dietz Elkhorn Road | ||
546.1 | 878.9 | 546 | Fair Oaks Parkway, Tarpon Drive | ||||
548.2 | 882.2 | 548 | Old Fredericksburg Road, Buckskin Drive | ||||
Leon Springs | 549.5 | 884.3 | 550 | FM 3351 (Ralph Fair Road) | |||
San Antonio | 550.6 | 886.1 | 551 | Boerne Stage Road – Leon Springs | Eastbound access is via exit 550 | ||
552.9 | 889.8 | 552 | Dominion Drive | ||||
553.8 | 891.3 | 554 | Camp Bullis Road | ||||
553.9 | 891.4 | 555 | La Cantera Parkway – Fiesta Texas | ||||
555.3 | 893.7 | 556A | Loop 1604 (Anderson Loop) | ||||
555.8 | 894.5 | 556B | Frontage Road | Access to Via Park and Ride | |||
557.0 | 896.4 | 557 | UTSA Boulevard – University of Texas at San Antonio | Former Spur 53 | |||
557.4 | 897.0 | 558 | De Zavala Road | ||||
558.3 | 898.5 | 559 | Spur 345 south (Fredericksburg Road) | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access to South Texas Medical Center | |||
558.9 | 899.5 | 560A | Huebner Road | Signed as exit 560 westbound; access to South Texas Medical Center | |||
559.8 | 900.9 | 560B | Frontage Road | Eastbound exit and entrance | |||
560.3 | 901.7 | 561 | Wurzbach Road | Access to South Texas Medical Center | |||
561.3 | 903.3 | 562 | Medical Drive | Westbound access is via exit 561; access to South Texas Medical Center | |||
562.7 | 905.6 | 563 | Callaghan Road | Eastbound access is via exit 562 | |||
562.8 | 905.7 | 564 | I-410 (Connally Loop) | I-410 exit 16; access to San Antonio International Airport | |||
563.0 | 906.1 | 565A | Crossroads Boulevard – Balcones Heights | Access to Methodist Texan Hospital | |||
564.3 | 908.2 | 565B | Vance Jackson Road | ||||
565.2 | 909.6 | 566A | West Avenue | ||||
566.0 | 910.9 | 566B | Fresno Drive | ||||
566.2 | 911.2 | 566C | Hildebrand Avenue, Fulton Avenue | Signed as exit 567A westbound | |||
567.3 | 913.0 | 567 | Loop 345 (Fredericksburg Road) / Woodlawn Avenue | Signed as exit 567B westbound; westbound exit via lower level | |||
568.1 | 914.3 | 568A | Cincinnati Avenue | Westbound exit via lower level and eastbound entrance via lower level | |||
568.5 | 914.9 | 568B | Spur 421 (Culebra Avenue) – Bandera | Signed as exit 568 eastbound; access via upper level | |||
568.7 | 915.2 | 569A | Colorado Street | Signed as exit 569 westbound; access via lower level; no eastbound entrance | |||
569.0 | 915.7 | 569B | Frio Street – Downtown San Antonio | Eastbound exit via lower level and entrance via lower level | |||
569.1 | 915.9 | 569C | Santa Rosa Street – Downtown San Antonio | Eastbound exit via upper level and westbound entrance via upper level | |||
569.6 | 916.7 | 570 | I-35 north (Pan Am Expressway) – Austin | Western end of I-35 concurrency; no exit number westbound (concurrent section uses I-35 exit numbers); I-35 exit 156 southbound | |||
See I-35 | |||||||
572.2 | 920.9 | 572 | US 90 west (Rodriguez Freeway) – Del Rio, Lackland AFB, Port San Antonio | Western end of US 90 concurrency | |||
572.4 | 921.2 | I-35 south (Pan Am Expressway) – Laredo | Eastern end of I-35 concurrency; exit 153 northbound | ||||
573.0 | 922.2 | 573 | To Spur 536 (Roosevelt Avenue) / Probandt Street | ||||
574.1 | 923.9 | 574 | I-37 / US 281 (Adams Freeway) – Corpus Christi, Johnson City, Downtown San Antonio, The Alamo | I-37 exit 139, access to San Antonio Amtrak Station | |||
574.9 | 925.2 | 575 | Pine Street, Hackberry Street | ||||
575.1 | 925.5 | 576 | New Braunfels Avenue, Gevers Street | ||||
576.5 | 927.8 | 577 | US 87 south (Roland Avenue) – Victoria | Eastern end of US 87 concurrency | |||
577.4 | 929.2 | 578 | Pecan Valley Drive, M. L. King Drive | ||||
578.5 | 931.0 | 579 | Houston Street, Commerce Street | ||||
579.6 | 932.8 | 580 | Loop 13 (W. W. White Road) | ||||
580.4 | 934.1 | 581 | I-410 (Connally Loop) / SH 130 south | Western end of SH 130 concurrency; I-410 exit 33 | |||
581.4 | 935.7 | 582 | Ackerman Road – Kirby | No access from I-10 eastbound, exit is from I-410 to I-10 eastbound | |||
581.7 | 936.2 | 583 | Foster Road | ||||
582.6 | 937.6 | 584 | Woodlake Parkway | ||||
585.2 | 941.8 | 585 | FM 1516 – Converse | ||||
586.8 | 944.4 | 587 | Loop 1604 (Anderson Loop) – Randolph AFB, Universal City | ||||
588.6 | 947.3 | 589 | Graytown Road, Pfeil Road | ||||
591.2 | 951.4 | 591 | FM 1518 – Schertz | ||||
Converse | 593.1 | 954.5 | 593 | FM 2538 (Trainer Hale Road) | |||
Guadalupe | Marion | 594.8 | 957.2 | 595 | Zuehl Road | ||
596.7 | 960.3 | 597 | Santa Clara Road | ||||
598.5 | 963.2 | 599 | FM 465 – Marion | ||||
| 600.1 | 965.8 | 600 | Schwab Road | |||
| 601.0 | 967.2 | 601 | FM 775 – New Berlin, La Vernia | |||
Seguin | 602.9 | 970.3 | 603 | US 90 east to US 90 Alt. – Seguin | Eastern end of US 90 concurrency; eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
603.8 | 971.7 | 604 | FM 725 – Lake McQueeney | ||||
604.9 | 973.5 | 605 | FM 464 | ||||
606.4 | 975.9 | 607 | SH 46 / FM 78 – New Braunfels, Lake McQueeney | ||||
608.3 | 979.0 | 609 | Bus. SH 123 (Austin Street) | ||||
609.5 | 980.9 | 610 | SH 123 – San Marcos, Stockdale | ||||
611.5 | 984.1 | 612 | US 90 – Seguin | ||||
613.8 | 987.8 | 614 | SH 130 Toll north – Austin, Waco | Eastern end of SH 130 concurrency | |||
Kingsbury | 616.8 | 992.6 | 617 | FM 2438 – Kingsbury | |||
619.2 | 996.5 | 619 | Guadalupe County Safety Rest Area | Signed as exit 618 eastbound | |||
619.6 | 997.1 | 620 | FM 1104 – Kingsbury | ||||
| 625.2 | 1,006.2 | 625 | Darst Field Road | |||
Luling | 627.4 | 1,009.7 | 628 | SH 80 – Nixon, Luling, San Marcos | |||
Gonzales | No major intersections | ||||||
Caldwell | Luling | 631.6 | 1,016.5 | 632 | US 183 to US 90 – Gonzales, Cuero, Luling, Lockhart, Austin | ||
Gonzales | | 636.8 | 1,024.8 | 637 | FM 794 – Harwood | ||
| 642.3 | 1,033.7 | 642 | SH 304 – Bastrop, Gonzales | |||
| 649.0 | 1,044.5 | 649 | SH 97 – Waelder, Gonzales | |||
| 652.4 | 1,049.9 | 653 | US 90 – Waelder | |||
Fayette | Flatonia | 661.2 | 1,064.1 | 661 | SH 95 / FM 609 – Flatonia, Smithville, La Grange, Moulton, Shiner | ||
| 667.6 | 1,074.4 | 668 | FM 2238 – Engle | |||
Schulenburg | 673.6 | 1,084.1 | 674 | US 77 – Schulenburg, La Grange | |||
| 676.9 | 1,089.4 | 677 | US 90 | |||
Colorado | Weimar | 681.4 | 1,096.6 | 682 | FM 155 – Weimar, La Grange | ||
| 689.1 | 1,109.0 | 689 | US 90 / Hattermann Lane | |||
| 692 | Colorado County Safety Rest Area | |||||
| 692.5 | 1,114.5 | 693 | FM 2434 to SH 71 west – Glidden, La Grange | |||
Columbus | 693.8 | 1,116.6 | 695 | SH 71 west – La Grange, Austin | Western end of SH 71 concurrency; no eastbound exit | ||
695.6 | 1,119.5 | 696 | SH 71 east / Bus. SH 71 – Columbus, El Campo | Eastern end of SH 71 concurrency | |||
| 698.1 | 1,123.5 | 698 | US 90 west / Alleyton Road – Columbus | Western end of US 90 concurrency | ||
| 699.4 | 1,125.6 | 699 | FM 102 – Eagle Lake | |||
| 703.5 | 1,132.2 | 704 | FM 949 – Bernardo, Cat Spring | |||
| 708.9 | 1,140.9 | 709 | FM 2761 / Bernardo Road – Bernardo | |||
Austin | | 711.3 | 1,144.7 | 713 | Beckendorff Road | ||
Sealy | 715.5 | 1,151.5 | 716 | Pyka Road | |||
717.5 | 1,154.7 | 718 | US 90 east / FM 3538 | Eastern end of US 90 concurrency | |||
719.3 | 1,157.6 | 720 | SH 36 – Sealy, Rosenberg, Bellville | ||||
720.2 | 1,159.0 | 720A | Outlet Center Drive | Eastbound exit only | |||
721.5 | 1,161.1 | 721 | US 90 west | Western end of US 90 concurrency; westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
San Felipe | 722.2 | 1,162.3 | 723 | FM 1458 – San Felipe, Frydek | |||
| 724.7 | 1,166.3 | 725 | Mlcak Road | Eastbound access is via exit 723 | ||
| 725.4 | 1,167.4 | 726 | Chew Road | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
Waller | | 727.8 | 1,171.3 | 729 | Peach Ridge Road, Donigan Road (US 90 east) | Eastern end of US 90 concurrency; signed as exit 730 westbound | |
Brookshire | 731.1 | 1,176.6 | 731 | FM 1489 (Koomey Road) – Simonton | No westbound exit; westbound exit is via exit 732 | ||
731.9 | 1,177.9 | 732 | FM 359 – Brookshire, Fulshear | No eastbound exit (closed until May 2023); eastbound exit is via exit 731 | |||
| 733.9 | 1,181.1 | 734 | Woods Road | |||
Katy | 735.0 | 1,182.9 | 735 | Igloo Road, Jordan Ranch Boulevard | No westbound entrance | ||
736.1 | 1,184.6 | 737 | Pederson Road | ||||
738.4 | 1,188.3 | 739 | Cane Island Parkway | ||||
Fort Bend | 739.1 | 1,189.5 | 740 | FM 1463 | No eastbound exit | ||
739.8 | 1,190.6 | 741 | Pin Oak Road | Westbound access is via exit 740 | |||
Harris | 741.1 | 1,192.7 | US 90 west / Katy Mills Boulevard | Western end of US 90 concurrency; westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
741.5 | 1,193.3 | 742 | Katy-Fort Bend County Road | Eastbound access is via exit 741 | |||
741.8 | 1,193.8 | 743A | SH 99 (Frontage Road) | Signed as exit 743 westbound; access to Memorial Hermann Katy Hospital | |||
742.3 | 1,194.6 | 743B | SH 99 Toll north / SH 99 south (Grand Parkway) | ||||
743.2 | 1,196.1 | 745 | Mason Road | ||||
744.6 | 1,198.3 | 746 | Westgreen Boulevard | ||||
745.5 | 1,199.8 | 747A | Fry Road | ||||
746.5 | 1,201.4 | 747B | Greenhouse Road | ||||
Houston | 747.3 | 1,202.7 | 748 | Barker–Cypress Road | Access to West Houston Airport and Methodist West Houston Hospital | ||
748.6 | 1,204.8 | 750 | Park Ten Boulevard | ||||
749.8 | 1,206.7 | 751 | SH 6 | Former FM 1960 | |||
750.6 | 1,208.0 | — | I-10 Toll begins (Katy Tollway) | Western end of Katy Tollway | |||
751.4 | 1,209.3 | — | Addicks Park & Ride | Interchange for Katy Tollway only | |||
751.1 | 1,208.8 | 753A | Eldridge Parkway | ||||
752.6 | 1,211.2 | 753B | Dairy Ashford Road | ||||
753.3 | 1,212.3 | 754 | Kirkwood Road | ||||
754.3 | 1,213.9 | 755 | Wilcrest Drive | ||||
755.8 | 1,216.3 | 756A | Beltway 8 (Frontage Road) | Eastbound access is via exit 755 | |||
755.1 | 1,215.2 | 756B | Sam Houston Tollway | Signed as exit 756 eastbound | |||
755.9 | 1,216.5 | 757 | Gessner Road | Access to Memorial Hermann Memorial City Medical Center | |||
757.2 | 1,218.6 | 758 | Bunker Hill Road | ||||
757.9 | 1,219.7 | 759A | Blalock Road, Echo Lane | Signed as exit 759 eastbound | |||
758.7 | 1,221.0 | 759B | Campbell Road | Eastbound access is via exit 759 | |||
758.8 | 1,221.2 | 760 | Bingle Road, Voss Road | ||||
759.7 | 1,222.6 | 761A | Wirt Road, Chimney Rock Road | Signed as exit 761 eastbound | |||
761.0 | 1,224.7 | 761B | Antoine Drive, Silber Road | Eastbound access is via exit 761 | |||
760.7 | 1,224.2 | — | North Post Oak Road – NW Transit Center | Eastbound exit only for Katy Tollway | |||
761.5 | 1,225.5 | — | I-10 Toll ends (Katy Tollway) | Eastern end of Katy Tollway | |||
761.0 | 1,224.7 | 762 | Silber Road, North Post Oak Road, Katy Road | Signed as exit 762B westbound; Katy Road not signed eastbound | |||
762.0 | 1,226.3 | 763 | I-610 (West Loop Freeway) | I-610 exit 11; entrance from I-610 south includes direct entrance ramp from US 290 (Northwest Freeway) | |||
762.8 | 1,227.6 | ♦ | US 290 (Express Lanes) | HOV/toll exit; westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
763.5 | 1,228.7 | 764 | Washington Avenue, Westcott Street | ||||
764.3 | 1,230.0 | 765A | T. C. Jester Boulevard | ||||
764.6 | 1,230.5 | 765B | Durham Drive, Shepherd Drive, Patterson Street | ||||
765.3 | 1,231.6 | 766 | Yale Street, Heights Boulevard | ||||
765.8 | 1,232.4 | 767A | Studemont Drive | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
766.5 | 1,233.6 | 767B | Taylor Street | ||||
767.3– 767.7 | 1,234.8– 1,235.5 | 768 | I-45 (North Freeway, Gulf Freeway) – Dallas, Galveston | Signed as exits 768A (north) and 768B (south); left exits eastbound; I-45 exit 48 | |||
768.1 | 1,236.1 | 769A | Smith Street – Downtown Houston | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance, access to Houston Amtrak station | |||
768.5 | 1,236.8 | 769B | San Jacinto Street / Main Street | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance, access to Houston Amtrak station | |||
768.6 | 1,236.9 | 769C | McKee Street, Hardy Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
769.1– 769.4 | 1,237.7– 1,238.2 | 770 | I-69 / US 59 (Eastex Freeway) – Victoria, Cleveland | I-69/US 59 exit 132; signed as exits 770A (south) and 770C (north) | |||
769.3 | 1,238.1 | 770B | Jensen Drive, Meadow Street, Gregg Street | ||||
770.4 | 1,239.8 | 771A | Waco Street | ||||
770.9 | 1,240.6 | 771B | Lockwood Drive | No westbound entrance | |||
771.5 | 1,241.6 | 772 | Kress Street, Lathrop Street | ||||
772.5 | 1,243.2 | 773A | US 90 Alt. (North Wayside Drive) | ||||
772.9 | 1,243.9 | 773B | McCarty Drive | ||||
773.7 | 1,245.1 | 774 | Gellhorn Drive | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
773.9 | 1,245.5 | 775A | I-610 (East Loop Freeway) | I-610 exit 26 | |||
774.1 | 1,245.8 | 775B | US 90 east (Crosby Freeway) – Liberty | Eastern end of US 90 concurrency; eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
775.1 | 1,247.4 | 776A | Mercury Drive – Jacinto City, Galena Park | ||||
775.5 | 1,248.0 | 776B | John Ralston Road, Holland Avenue | ||||
776.4 | 1,249.5 | 778A | FM 526 (Federal Road) | Westbound access is via exit 778 | |||
777.6 | 1,251.4 | 778B | Normandy Street | Signed as exit 778 westbound | |||
778.5 | 1,252.9 | 779A | Westmont Street | Westbound exit only | |||
778.6 | 1,253.0 | 779B | Market Street Road / Uvalde Road | Signed as exit 780 eastbound; access to East Houston Regional Medical Center | |||
Channelview | 779.6 | 1,254.6 | 780 | Freeport Street | Eastbound access is via exit 779B | ||
780.1 | 1,255.4 | 781A | Beltway 8 (Frontage Road) | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
780.5 | 1,256.1 | 781 | Beltway 8 (Sam Houston Parkway) to Sam Houston Tollway | Signed as exits 781B eastbound and 781A westbound; southbound Beltway 8 provides access to Sam Houston Tollway including toll bridge | |||
781.3 | 1,257.4 | 781B | Market Street | Westbound exit only | |||
781.2 | 1,257.2 | 782 | Dell Dale Avenue | No westbound entrance | |||
782.2 | 1,258.8 | 783 | Sheldon Road | ||||
783.1 | 1,260.3 | 784 | Cedar Lane, Bayou Drive | ||||
784.4 | 1,262.4 | 785 | Magnolia Avenue | ||||
785.5 | 1,264.1 | 786 | Monmouth Drive | ||||
Baytown | 787.0 | 1,266.6 | 787 | Crosby-Lynchburg Road | |||
787.5 | 1,267.4 | 788 | Spur 330 east – Baytown | Westbound access is via exit 787 | |||
788.5 | 1,269.0 | 789 | Thompson Road | No eastbound exit (closed until May 2022); eastbound exit is via exit 790 | |||
789.2 | 1,270.1 | 790 | Ellis School Road | Westbound exit only | |||
789.9 | 1,271.2 | 790 | Wade Road | Westbound access is via exit 791 | |||
790.6 | 1,272.3 | 791 | John Martin Road | ||||
791.5 | 1,273.8 | 792 | Garth Road | Access to San Jacinto Methodist Hospital | |||
792.6 | 1,275.6 | 793 | North Main Street | ||||
794.1 | 1,278.0 | 795 | Sjolander Road | ||||
795.2 | 1,279.8 | 796 | Frontage Road | Signed as exit 796B westbound | |||
Chambers | Mont Belvieu | 796.7 | 1,282.2 | 798 | SH 146 – Mont Belvieu, Baytown, Dayton | Signed as exit 797 eastbound | |
798.6 | 1,285.2 | 799 | SH 99 Toll (Grand Parkway) | Access to Grand Parkway via frontage roads; northbound SH 99 Toll opened in May 2022. | |||
799.9 | 1,287.3 | 800 | FM 3180 (Eagle Drive) | ||||
Cove | 802.4 | 1,291.3 | 803 | FM 565 – Cove, Old River-Winfree | |||
| 804.6 | 1,294.9 | 805 | Trinity River Boat Ramp Turnaround | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| 805.7 | 1,296.6 | 806 | Frontage Road | Westbound entrance only | ||
| 806.4 | 1,297.8 | 807 | Wallisville | |||
| 809.0 | 1,302.0 | 810 | FM 563 – Anahuac, Liberty | |||
| 810.6 | 1,304.5 | 811 | Turtle Bayou Turnaround | Eastbound exit only | ||
| 811.2 | 1,305.5 | 813 | SH 61 – Hankamer, Anahuac | Signed as exit 812 eastbound | ||
| 814.0 | 1,310.0 | 815 | Frontage Road, Wallace Road - Rest Area | Signed as exit 814 eastbound; rest areas off each direction's respective Frontage Road | ||
| 816.0 | 1,313.2 | 817 | FM 1724 | |||
| 818.3 | 1,316.9 | 819 | Jenkins Road | |||
| 821.8 | 1,322.6 | 822 | FM 1410 | |||
Winnie | 826.5 | 1,330.1 | 827 | FM 1406 | |||
827.4 | 1,331.6 | 828 | SH 73 / SH 124 – Winnie, Port Arthur | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
827.9 | 1,332.4 | 829 | FM 1663 to SH 73 / SH 124 – Winnie, Galveston | ||||
831 | Brush Island Road | Exit opened in February 2022 | |||||
Jefferson | | 832.3 | 1,339.5 | 833 | Hamshire Road | ||
| 837.7 | 1,348.1 | 838 | FM 365 – Fannett, Nome | |||
| 842.8 | 1,356.4 | 843 | Smith Road | |||
Beaumont | 844.4 | 1,358.9 | 845 | FM 364 (Major Drive) | Westbound access is via exit 847 | ||
846.1 | 1,361.7 | 847 | Brooks Road | Eastbound access is via exit 845 | |||
847.5 | 1,363.9 | 848 | Walden Road | ||||
848.6 | 1,365.7 | 849 | US 69 south / US 96 south / US 287 south – Port Arthur | Western end of US 69/US 96/US 287 concurrency; access to Jack Brooks Regional Airport | |||
849.5 | 1,367.1 | 850 | Washington Boulevard | Eastbound access is via exit 849 | |||
850.1 | 1,368.1 | 851 | US 90 (College Street) – Liberty | Western end of US 90 concurrency; access to Baptist Beaumont Hospital | |||
851.5 | 1,370.4 | 852A | Laurel Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
850.5 | 1,368.7 | 852B | Calder Avenue, Harrison Avenue, Gladys Avenue | ||||
851.7 | 1,370.7 | 853A | US 69 north / US 96 north / US 287 north – Lufkin, Jasper | Eastern end of US 69/US 96/US 287 concurrency | |||
852.2 | 1,371.5 | 853B | 11th Street | ||||
852.9 | 1,372.6 | 853C | 7th Street | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
853.4 | 1,373.4 | 854 | Spur 380 (M. L. King Parkway) | ||||
854.2 | 1,374.7 | 855A | Willow Street – Downtown Beaumont | ||||
854.3 | 1,374.9 | 855B | Magnolia Avenue, Pine Street | Eastbound access is via exit 854 | |||
Orange | | 855.3 | 1,376.5 | 856 | Old Highway 90 – Rose City | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |
Rose City | 857.3 | 1,379.7 | 858 | Asher Turnaround – Rose City | |||
858.3 | 1,381.3 | 859 | Dewitt Road, Bonner Turnaround, Asher Turnaround | ||||
Vidor | 859.5 | 1,383.2 | 860 | FM 105 (N Main Street) – Vidor | Westbound access is via exit 861 | ||
860.4 | 1,384.7 | 861 | Tram Road, Old Highway | Westbound access is via exit 862B | |||
860.6 | 1,385.0 | 861A | SH 12 – Mauriceville, Deweyville | Westbound exit signed as exit 862B | |||
861.8 | 1,386.9 | 862A | Timberlane Drive, Lakeside Street | Eastbound exit only | |||
863.2 | 1,389.2 | 864 | FM 1132 (Evangeline Drive) / FM 1135 (Kishi Road) | ||||
864.6 | 1,391.4 | 865 | Doty Road | Westbound exit only | |||
866.5 | 1,394.5 | 867 | Frontage Road | Eastbound exit only | |||
| 867.7 | 1,396.4 | 869 | FM 1442 – Bridge City | |||
| 869.2 | 1,398.8 | 870 | FM 1136 | |||
| 871.3 | 1,402.2 | 872 | North Mimosa Lane, Jackson Drive | Westbound exit only | ||
Orange | 871.8 | 1,403.0 | 873 | SH 62 / SH 73 – Bridge City, Port Arthur, Mauriceville | |||
872.4 | 1,404.0 | 874A | Bus. US 90 east – Pinehurst | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; eastbound entrance is via Womack Road | |||
873.3 | 1,405.4 | 875 | Womack Road | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | |||
Orange–Pinehurst line | 873.5 | 1,405.8 | FM 3247 (M. L. King Jr. Drive) | Signed eastbound as exit 874; separate westbound exit from Womack Road; access to Baptist Orange Hospital | |||
874.7 | 1,407.7 | Woodlark Street | Eastbound exit and entrance only | ||||
Orange | 875.7 | 1,409.3 | 876 | Frontage Road – Adams Bayou | Closed for construction; normally westbound exit only | ||
875.8 | 1,409.5 | 877 | SH 87 (16th Street) – Orange, Newton | No westbound exit (closed for construction) | |||
877.1 | 1,411.6 | 878 | Bus. US 90 west (Simmons Drive) | ||||
878.7 | 1,414.1 | 879 | Texas Travel Information Center | Eastbound access is via exit 880 | |||
879.0 | 1,414.6 | 880 | Sabine River Turnaround | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | |||
Sabine River | 879.6 | 1,415.6 | Texas–Louisiana line | ||||
I-10 east / US 90 east – Lake Charles | Continuation into Louisiana | ||||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
|
Related highways
I-10 has four business loops within the state. All of these routes are in the far western Trans-Pecos region. These routes are located along the former routes of US 80 and US 290 and include Bus. I-10-C in Sierra Blanca, Bus. I-10-D in Van Horn, Bus. I-10-F in Balmorhea, and Bus. I-10-G in Fort Stockton.
I-10 has three auxiliary routes in Texas:
- I-110: A spur route in El Paso providing a connection over the Bridge of the Americas to Ciudad Juarez in Mexico
- I-410: The Connally Loop, a beltway around San Antonio
- I-610: The inner beltway around Houston
Notes
- ^ The certified mileage given is shorter than the actual mileage as TxDOT considers I-10 to be discontinuous at rather than concurrent with I-35 in San Antonio.
- ^ Some sources use "IH-10", as "IH" is an abbreviation used by the Texas Department of Transportation for Interstate Highways.[2]
- ^ U.S. Highway 83 is about 10 miles (16 km) longer than I-10 within Texas.
References
- ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Interstate Highway No. 10". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved September 21, 2006.
- ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "Highway Designations Glossary". Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
- ^ Texas Advisory Committee (August 2011). Human Trafficking in Texas: More Resources and Resolve Needed to Stem Surge of Modern Day Slavery (Report). United States Commission on Civil Rights. p. 4. Retrieved September 13, 2018.
- ^ Christian, Carol (May 13, 2015). "Bragging rights or embarrassment? Katy Freeway at Beltway 8 is world's widest". Houston Chronicle. Hearst. Retrieved January 4, 2016. Note that China has a 50-lane toll plaza approach on a freeway.
- ^ Fernandez, Manny (September 10, 2012). "Reclaiming the Title of Fastest in the Land". The New York Times. Retrieved June 6, 2015.
- ^ "85 MPH! Texas to Open Tollway with Fastest Speed Limit in Nation". NBC News. September 6, 2012. Retrieved June 6, 2015.
- ^ 2004 San Antonio District Traffic Map (PDF) (Map). Texas Department of Transportation. 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-27. Retrieved September 20, 2006.
- ^ Patton, Mary Claire (2020-10-19). "Bexar County's 2nd HOV lane now open". KSAT-TV. Retrieved 2022-08-21.
- ^ Schematic Layout: IH 10 Katy Frwy, IH 10 at Bunker Hill Road (PDF) (Map). Texas Department of Transportation. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 9, 2014.
- ^ "Lane Configurations". Katy Freeway. Texas Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on April 7, 2014.
- ^ Google (September 21, 2006). "Interstate 10 lanes at Antoine Drive" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved September 21, 2006.
- ^ Slotboom, Erik (2003). Houston Freeways: A Historical and Visual Journey (PDF). [S.l.]: O.F. Slotboom. p. 214. ISBN 978-0974160535.
- ^ Microsoft; Nokia (January 20, 2015). "9669 I-10, Houston, TX 77024" (Map). Bing Maps. Microsoft. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
- ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "U.S. Highway No. 80". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved September 21, 2006.
- ^ Transportation Planning and Programming Division (n.d.). "U.S. Highway No. 290". Highway Designation Files. Texas Department of Transportation. Retrieved September 21, 2006.
- ^ "SA Project Top Single Road Job". Austin Statesman. April 2, 1965. ProQuest 1521826279.
{{cite news}}
:|url-access=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ Purcell, Brian (December 6, 2010). "San Antonio Freeway System: History". The Texas Highway Man Pages. Retrieved July 13, 2013.
- ^ "Katy Freeway Opens (1968)". Texas Archive of the Moving Image. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
- ^ "24 Hour Saturation Counts". H-GAC Transportation Department. Archived from the original on August 8, 2006. Retrieved September 20, 2006.
- ^ "Governor Perry and Rep. Culberson Join TxDOT for Katy Frwy Ribbon Cutting" (Press release). Katy Freeway Public Information Office. June 26, 2006. Retrieved September 20, 2006.
- ^ "Toll Road Info". Harris County Toll Road Authority. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
- ^ Manning, Johnathan (March 10, 2016). "Water Rages from Toledo Bend Dam at Record Pace". Lake Charles, LA: KPLC-TV. Retrieved August 26, 2016.
- ^ Wells, Carlie Kollath (March 19, 2016). "I-10 Closed at Texas–Louisiana Line for 4th Day Due to Flooding". The Times-Picayune. New Orleans. Retrieved August 26, 2016.
- ^ Texas Department of Transportation (2018). "Statewide Planning Map LRS Readout (ArcGIS)". Retrieved October 4, 2019.
External links
- Interstate Highways in Texas
- Interstate 10
- El Paso County, Texas
- Hudspeth County, Texas
- Culberson County, Texas
- Jeff Davis County, Texas
- Reeves County, Texas
- Pecos County, Texas
- Crockett County, Texas
- Sutton County, Texas
- Kimble County, Texas
- Gillespie County, Texas
- Kerr County, Texas
- Kendall County, Texas
- Bexar County, Texas
- Caldwell County, Texas
- Guadalupe County, Texas
- Gonzales County, Texas
- Fayette County, Texas
- Colorado County, Texas
- Austin County, Texas
- Waller County, Texas
- Fort Bend County, Texas
- Harris County, Texas
- Chambers County, Texas
- Jefferson County, Texas
- Orange County, Texas